Tuesday, 12 May 2026

JOSE-as expected much to say! Almost!!

José Mário dos Santos Mourinho Félix born 26 January 1963, is a Portuguese professional football manager, coach and former player, who is currently the head coach of Premeira Club Benfica. His team is currently unbeaten in the Portuguese league, even though they are third on the table. The veteran manager refused to discuss his future this week ahead of Benfica’s final game of the season against Estoril Praia. He said: “There’s a match against Estoril, and from Monday onwards I’ll be able to answer questions about my future as a coach and Benfica’s future.” He is shown below being lauded by one of his previous hero players!!

Self-nicknamed "the Special One", he is one of the most decorated managers of all time. Mourinho has won league championships in four countries, is one of only seven managers to have won the European Cup with two clubs, and is the only manager to have won all three current UEFA club competitions.

After an uneventful career as a midfielder in Portuguese Leagues, Mourinho retired from playing aged 24 and moved into coaching. He was first an interpreter for Bobby Robson at Sporting CP and Porto, before gaining success as an assistant at Barcelona under Robson and his successor, Louis van Gaal. After brief managerial stints at Benfica and Unaio de Leiria, Mourinho returned to Porto in 2002, winning two Primeria League titles, the Taca de Portugual, the UEFA Cup and the UEFA Champions League. That success earned him a move to Chelsea in 2004, where he remarked, "I think I'm [the] special one" at his first press conference, leading to British media dubbing him "the Special One". With Chelsea, Mourinho won two Premier League titles, an FA Cup, and two League Cups in three seasons, before departing in 2007 amid reports of disagreements with owner Roman Abramovich

In 2008, Mourinho joined Italian club Inter Milan. He led them to the Serie A title in his first season, before winning a continental treble!! That is, the Coppa Intalia and the UEFA Champions League—in 2010, a first in history for an Italian club. This made him one of five coaches to have won the European Cup with two clubs, and later that year, he was crowned the inaugural FIFA World Coach of the Yeat. 

Mourinho then moved to Real Madrid in Spain, where he won the La Liga title in 2011-12, breaking several domestic records for points, goals scored, and wins in a season. He also became the fifth coach to win league titles in four countries. Mourinho left Real Madrid in 2013 and rejoined Chelsea, where he won another League title and League Cup, but was dismissed in 2015 after a poor run of results.

Mourinho was appointed manager of Manchester United in 2016 and of Tottenham Hotspur in 2019, but both tenures ended acrimoniously. At Old Trafford, he won the Community Shield, League Cup and UEFA Europa League in his first season. At Tottenham, he led the team to a League Cup final. He managed Roma from 2021 to 2024, winning the inaugural UEFA Europa ConferenceLeaguew in his first season. This was Roma's first European title and their first trophy since 2008. The achievement made Mourinho the first manager to win a major European competition with four different clubs and the third to win all three European competitions. He joined Turkish Super League club, Fenerbahce in July 2024, but was sacked in August 2025 after failing to qualify for the Champions League.

Mourinho was named Portuguese Coach of the Century by the Portuguese Federation (FPF) in 2015. Due to his tactical knowledge, charismatic and controversial personality, and a reputation for prioritising results over attractive football, he has drawn comparisons—from both admirers and critics with Argentine manager Helenio Herrera.

Early life: Mourinho was born in 1963 into a large middle-class family in Setubal, Portugal, as the son of goalkeeper José Manuel Mourinho Félix, who was known by the name Félix Mourinho, and primary school teacher Maria Júlia Carrajola dos Santos.  Family: His father played football professionally for Vitoria Setubel and Belenenses, earning one cap for Portugal in 1972, and later worked as a football manager and the club director of Vitória de Setúbal.  His mother was raised by her uncle Mário Lêdo, who came to control the Setúbal sardine canning industry!! and kept a mansion in Aires near Palmela, where Mourinho grew up with his parents. 

Education:  Mourinho failed in the subject of mathematics during the final year of high school, and this prevented him from finishing high school in time to enrol at the physical education college as was his wish. After finishing high school in the special examination period of September, his mother enrolled him in a private business school because there were no vacant seats for him in the physical education college and his mother believed business school would bring him to a more successful career path. Mourinho dropped out of business school on his first day, deciding he would rather focus on sport, and chose to attend the Instituto Superior de Educação Física of the Technical University of Lisbon to study physical education. He was taught there by his mentor Manuel Sergio, the ex-chairman and deputy director of Belenenses (1975–77), whose humanist approach to kinesiology he later cited as formative!!  

After Mourinho concluded his education in ISEF, he attended coaching courses held by the English and Scottish Football Associations. In this period of his life, former Scotland manager Andy Roxburgh took note of the young Portuguese's drive and attention to detail. Mourinho sought to redefine the role of coach in football by mixing coaching theory with motivational and psychological techniques.


Playing career:  

Mourinho wanted to follow in his father's footsteps and joined the Belenenses youth team. Graduating to the senior level, he left the club in 1980 to sign for Rio Ave, where he played for the reserve team, and in 1981, was joined by his father, who was named first team manager. There, he struck up a prolific partnership with veteran striker Mário Reis. According to former teammate Baltemar Brito (who would become an assistant to Mourinho early on his managerial career), the duo scored around 100 goals, with Mourinho netting forty-seven times. In addition to playing for the reserves, Mourinho was usually tasked with scouting other teams for his father. He was rarely selected by his father, but he made his debut for the club in the third round of the Taça de Portugal, in a 2–1 extra time win over Salguerios. 

On the final day of the campaign against champions-elect Sporting CP, a defender was injured in the pre-match warm up, so he was told to get changed. Club president José Maria Pinho, fearing the threat of nepotism, overruled the decision to do so; the incident saw the pair leave to join Belenenses in the summer. Mourinho mostly spent the season playing for the reserve team, and he played for the first team in the second round of the Taca de Portugal against Clube Desportivo de Vila Franca, an amateur club from Sao Miguel Island in the Azores. With Belenenses 8–0 up at half-time, Mourinho came on as a second-half substitute and scored a hat-trick as the team won 17–0, which remains the club's biggest ever victory in the tournament. 

When his father returned to Rio Ave, Mourinho did not go with him and continued to play in the lower levels of the Portuguese League system, first with Sesimbra, and then for Comercio Industria, where he finished his career. At the latter club, he was captain of the team and would save the life of a teammate who had gotten trapped in a car that had caught fire. Mourinho decided that he lacked the requisite pace and power to become a professional and chose to focus on becoming a football coach instead.

Coaching career

After leaving his job as a physical education school teacher, Mourinho looked for a path into professional football management in his hometown and became youth team coach at Vitória de Setúbal in the early 1990s. Later, he accepted the position of assistant manager at Estrela da Amadora then was a scout at Ovarense. Then, in 1992, an opportunity arose to work as a translator for a top foreign coach: Bobby Robson had been appointed as the new manager of Lisbon club Sporting CP and needed an English-speaking local coach to work as his Interpreter. Jose's lovely isn't he!


Monday, 11 May 2026

BETH MEAD MBE

Bethany Jane Mead (born 9 May 1995) is an English female professional footballer, a forward, playing for the Womens' Super League (WSL) club Arsenal and England. Previously she played for Sunderland. A creative and prolific forward, she has all-time most assists and all-time second-most goal contributions in the WSL. At UEFA Women's Euro 2022, she became the Golden Boot winner, Player of the Tournament, and top assist provider, leading England to win a major tournament for the first time. Later that year, she was named BBC Sports Personality of the Year, becoming the first women's footballer to win the prestigious award; and finished runner-up for the Ballon d'Or and UEFA Player of the Year. She was part of the England squad which won UEFA Championship 2025, having her penalty saved in the shootout of the tournament's final!.

In 2015, Mead won the WSL Golden Boot and the WSL Player of the Year award, becoming the youngest WSL Golden Boot winner at the age of 20. It was only a season after leading her then-club Sunderland's promotion and WSL-2 title win. Having scored 81 goals in 109 games, she is regarded as one of the greatest players to have ever played for Sunderland.

Converted to a winder at Arsenal, Mead holds numerous WSL records in playmaking, including all-time most assists, most assists in a season, most chances created in a season, and most chances created from open play in a season. She was the WSL top assist provider in the 2018-19 and 2021-22 seasons. In the 2021–22 season, she was nominated for WSL Player of the Season. She won the 2018–19 WSL title with Arsenal, as well as the 2024–25 Champions League.

Mead helped England reach the semi-final at the 2019 Womens World Cup, providing second-most assists in the tournament. In 2022, she broke Jimmy GReaves' 61-year-old record of the most goals scored in a season by an England player of either gender and was named BBC Womens' Footballer of the Year and World Soccer World PLayer of the Year. She was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2023 New Years' Honours for her services to football.

Mead and her alma mater Teesside University launched the Beth Mean Scholarship in February 2022. Her SundayTimes bestseller autobiography, Lioness: My Journey to Glory, was published in November 2022.

Mead grew up in Hinderwell, a small village near Whitby, in Yorkshire which she described as "a fishing town in the middle of nowhere".

Mead started playing football when she was six years old. Her mother wanted her to run off her boundless energy and took her to a Saturday morning football session on a village field in Hinderwell, which was run by a volunteer coach. The coach was concerned that Mead would be the only girl in the session but, when her mother came back an hour later to pick Mead up from her first session, the coach remarked that Mead was rougher than most of the boys. She played with the local boys on that bobbly community field as much as possible.

Mead took part in many sports, including cross country, netball, cricket, and hockey, but football She said "was my first love; my one true love". One day, Mead's local senior cricket team was one short. She joined in for the day and caught two balls from her brother's bowling. The local newspaper called it 'The Mead Show'.

Mead went to Oakridge Community Primary School in Hinderwell. There was no girls' football team at school, so she played for the boys' team. She was the only girl. However, the more she played, the more other girls wanted to join in. She was captain of the primary school team, and that made the other girls feel more comfortable, seeing she had been accepted and made captain. They won the local primary school cup for boys' teams with four girls in the team.

Mead began her youth career at California Boys FC and Middlesbrough centre of excellence at age nine. During her time playing for Middlesbrough academy, her mother picked up a second job to help cover the cost of petrol required for the twice-a-week 45-minute drive.

When Mead was playing at California Boys FC in the boys' league, the other team's players and parents would laugh when they saw her turn up because she was a girl. Her teammates used to tell the other team to laugh ahead of kick-off because they knew that as soon as the game started, she would be running rings around them. She minded neither because her dad told her, "While some people will always have opinions, and you would hear a few things, you don't need to say anything, and neither do I–your football will do the talking." After most games, she earned a lot of respect from teams and their parents for getting stuck in and playing well.

When Mead was just 13 or 14 at Middlesbrough academy, she scored a hat-trick , in seven minutes against Sunderland, one of the best teams in England at the time. As soon as she turned 16, Mick Mulhern, then-Sunderland manager, met her and her parents to sign her up for Sunderland. According to Mulhern, "she was a proper goalscorer, with either foot, from anywhere. When you think of someone at such a young, tender age, that I was so determined to sign her, it tells you what I thought of her then and what I knew she would become."

Sunday, 10 May 2026

A LONDON DERBY-QUITE IMPORTANT!!

In what is a crucial match for both sides, Champions League final-bound Arsenal continue their bid for a first top-flight title for 22 years against a West Ham United side who dropped into the bottom three after last weekend's results, NOW 18TH. The match is being played today @16:30 BST. (now!!)

Title chances in Arsenal's hands, The Gunners TOP of PL!!

The equation for Arsenal is simple on paper; win all four of their remaining matches and it will be the greatest season in the club's 139-year history!!!

Thierry Henry, part of the unbeaten "Invincibles" side, who were the last Arsenal team to win a league title in 2003-04, said that Mikel Arteta's squad would be known as the "Unforgettables" if they were to pull off a Premier League and Champions League double.

The Gunners travel to West Ham still on cloud nine after Tuesday's win over Atletico Madrid, but that euphoria must be put on hold as they get back to the business of trying to end their painful wait for a 14th top-flight title.

After consecutive league defeats last month their mettle and bottle was called into question but successive home wins – allied to Manchester City's draw at Everton on Monday - has handed the initiative firmly back to the Gunners.

If recent history is anything to go by, struggling West Ham are the ideal opposition for Arteta's side to face. The Gunners have only picked up more Premier League wins against Everton (40) than the 38 they have against the Hammers.

They have scored 11 goals across their last two visits to the London Stadium courtesy of a 6-0 thrashing in 2023-24 and a 5-2 victory last season. The only side in English league history to score five or more in three successive away games against the same opponent is West Brom at Birmingham between 1957 and 1960.

If Arsenal do secure a crucial win it will also set a new club record of 42 victories in all competitions within the same season, breaking a tie with their famous Double-winning side from 1970-71.

Their victory over Atletico Madrid on Tuesday also saw them record a 30th clean sheet of the campaign, which is their most since 1993-94.

Graphic showing that Arsenal have won 41 matches in all competitions this season, which is the joint most in their history

Hammers endure horror weekend.

While Arsenal are on a high, West Ham endured a morale-sapping weekend which ended with Nuno Espirito Santo's side slipping into the bottom three. Their heavy defeat at Brentford, coupled with Tottenham's win at Aston Villa, means with three games to go they are a point adrift of their bitter rivals with an inferior goal difference.

The Gunners are the last team the Hammers will want to meet given their recent record in home league matches against the north Londoners. Mikel Arteta's side have scored a whopping 21 goals across their last six top-flight visits to Stratford.

London derbies on home soil have also been a real Achilles heel for West Ham this season and they will be desperate to avoid making a very unwanted piece of history.

Having already lost at the London Stadium to Chelsea, Tottenham, Crystal Palace, Brentford and Fulham they could become the first side in English league history to lose six home games against fellow London teams within a season.

Graphic showing that West Ham have lost all five of their London derbies at home this season

They are at least unbeaten in their last six home league matches, which is their best run since their final season at Upton Park in 2015-16 (15 games). Nuno has named the same starting XI for four consecutive Premier League games but will surely be tempted to mix things up after saying his side "lost composure" after conceding the second goal against the Bees.

They did strike the woodwork four times in that match - a joint record in a Premier League game this season – but hard luck stories count for nothing at this stage of the campaign.

By the way Arsenal have scored more goals from corners than any other PL club and West Ham have conceded most!

Saturday, 9 May 2026

"A FIRST" AT WEMBLEY!!

Football On This Day – 9th May 1951 England played their first international against foreign opposition at Wembley, beating Argentina 2-1 in front of 60,000 fans. Since 1924, England had only previously played Scotland at Wembley. The Argentina match kicked off at 3 o'clock on a Wednesday afternoon - it would be another 4 years before floodlights were installed at OUR National Stadium.

England goals: Stan Mortenson 79' and Jackie Milburn 86'

Starting lineup: Goal: Bert Williams, Billy Wright (captain), Billy Ekersley, Alf Ramsey, Jim Taylor, Henry Cockburn, Vic Metcalfe, Jackie Milburn, Tom Finney, Stan Mortenson, Harold Hassall.

Manager: Walter Winterbottom   
 
Games won:4
Games drawn:5
Games lost:6
DateMatchResultScoreCompetition
09 May 1951England v ArgentinaL2-1International Friendly
14 May 1953Argentina v EnglandW3-1Unofficial
17 May 1953Argentina v EnglandD0-0International Friendly
02 Jun 1962England v ArgentinaL3-1FIFA World Cup
06 Jun 1964Argentina v EnglandW1-0Copa das Nacoes
23 Jul 1966England v ArgentinaL1-0FIFA World Cup
22 May 1974England v ArgentinaD2-2International Friendly
12 Jun 1977Argentina v EnglandD1-1International Friendly
13 May 1980England v ArgentinaL3-1International Friendly
22 Jun 1986Argentina v EnglandW2-1FIFA World Cup
25 May 1991England v ArgentinaD2-2England Challenge Cup
30 Jun 1998Argentina v EnglandW2-2FIFA World Cup
23 Feb 2000England v ArgentinaD0-0International Friendly
07 Jun 2002Argentina v EnglandL0-1FIFA World Cup
12 Nov 2005Argentina v EnglandL2-3International Friendly

Friday, 8 May 2026

BYE, BYE, CLOUGHIE


8th MAY 1993
Brian Clough couldn't ever be called the most popular of people in the sport, but he achieved brilliant success as a manager. He managed Derby to their first League title and repeated the feat at Nottingham Forest. More success followed at the City Ground with Forest becoming top-dogs in Europe, winning the European Cup in 1979 and retaining it a year later. Amazing. Sadly by the time he had announced his retirement Forest were struggling and his last match in charge saw Forest suffering relegation, finishing bottom in the first Premier League season of 1992/93. His last match in charge was on 8th May 1993 and ended with a 2-1 loss at Ipswich. 
But another Clough era was underway with Forest's goalscorer in that match being Brian's son Nigel. Both as a player and a manager Brian Clough achieved great success - if only the powers-to-be had given Cloughie the chance to manager England what might he have achieved?
Brian Clough, was renowned for his quick wit, immense self-confidence, and blunt honesty. His famous quotes—including " I wouldn't say I was the best manager in the business, but I was in the top one", perfectly captured his charisma and disdain for conventional coaching.
Full nameBrian Howard Clough
Date of birth21 March 1935
Place of birthMiddlesbrough
Date of death20 September 2004 (aged 69)
Place of deathDerby, England
Height5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
PositionStriker
Youth career
1951–1953Middlesbrough
1953–1955Billingham Synthonia
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1955–1961Middlesbrough213(197)
1961–1964Sunderland61(54)
Total274(251)
International career
1957–1958England U233(1)
1957England B1(1)
1959England2(0)
Managerial career
1965–1967Hartlepools United
1967–1973Derby County
1973–1974Brighton & Hove Albion
1974Leeds United
1975–1993Nottingham Forest
* Club domestic league appearances and goals